QUOTE(zimhibikie @ Aug 22 2011, 02:49 PM)
Tony Fenandez is a West Ham fan. Buying QPR is just business. So he bought and invest in QPR so he can make money in the future. Investing money into local footabll teams is the same as burning money, coz the money invested will surely be lost into pockets of local politicians..
Of course, the money routed through offshore tax havens by clubs in transactions are completely clean and never tainted by any dirt whatsoever.QUOTE(Ken @ Aug 22 2011, 04:14 PM)
the most i could see is bring malaysia players to train there and play some reserve matches ... then see if their performance justify for 1st team selection or not ...
if want straight play into 1st team, sorry that could not happen unless umno implement 30% bumi player to the team
...
Added on August 22, 2011, 4:18 pm
what you mean spend monies locally ?
give the money to the state clubs hoping they will use the money to train the players ?
lol
Added on August 22, 2011, 4:20 pm
ya, i don't understand why got people here criticise him not to spend locally which we all know what will happen ...
already force tony to swap air asia shares, now ask him to buy malaysia players pulak ...
need appoint rajagopal as the manager or not ?
There will always be a loss/ineffiency. You think all the money spent in England would be well-spent? What with the inflated transfer fees involved and high taxes (going to a rotting Tory government).if want straight play into 1st team, sorry that could not happen unless umno implement 30% bumi player to the team
Added on August 22, 2011, 4:18 pm
what you mean spend monies locally ?
give the money to the state clubs hoping they will use the money to train the players ?
lol
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Added on August 22, 2011, 4:20 pm
ya, i don't understand why got people here criticise him not to spend locally which we all know what will happen ...
already force tony to swap air asia shares, now ask him to buy malaysia players pulak ...
need appoint rajagopal as the manager or not ?
He does not have to invest in existing teams, he could start his own club.
To begin with, we have nothing approaching the French Clairefontaine or the old English Lilleshall youth academies. We don't even have clubs running dedicated youth programs.
Just about ALL the top-tier players would have come through a full-time youth programme in Europe and South America (Drogba being a very, very rare exception) and we don't have a single one apart from Bukit Jalil, which is too unfocused and government-run to be good.
The first tycoon to invest in a youth programme here will get my eternal support.
Aug 22 2011, 05:42 PM
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